By Allan Wall
07/26/2020
The COVID-19 coronavirus got started later in Latin America than in the United States, but it is now the region leading the world in raw numbers of COVID-19 infections.
From Reuters:
Coronavirus cases in Latin America for the first time have surpassed the combined infections in the United States and Canada, a Reuters tally showed on Sunday [July 26], amid a surge of infections in Brazil, Mexico, Peru, Colombia and Argentina. The quickly growing number of cases make Latin America the region most impacted by the pandemic globally, with 26.83% of worldwide cases. [Latin America leads world in coronavirus cases, Reuters count shows, (Reporting by Daniela Desantis and Javier Leira; Writing by Dave Sherwood; Editing by Will Dunham), Reuters, July 26, 2020]
Sounds like we better keep the southern border as tight as possible.
Latin America now has 4,327,160 total cases of the novel coronavirus compared to 4,308,495 infections in United States and Canada, according to the count based on data provided by the governments of each country. The United States continues to be the individual country with the highest number of infections and deaths from COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the virus, with more than 4.2 million cases and roughly 146,000 deaths, followed by Brazil, with 2.4 million cases and nearly 87,000 dead.
Mexico, Peru and Chile also are among the top 10 nations in COVID-19 cases.
Mexico is now #4 in coronavirus deaths, after the U.S., Brazil and the UK.
According to the Reuters count, the number of people known to have been infected worldwide exceeds 16.1 million. Health experts have said that official data almost certainly under-reports infections and deaths, particularly in countries with limited testing capacity.
Keep that southern border tight.
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